ownperson: (pb; purple rub face)
Agent South Dakota ([personal profile] ownperson) wrote in [community profile] ph_logs2025-12-15 01:03 pm

If I'm Out of Line, Just Show Me the Door [CLOSED]

Who: Agent South Dakota ([personal profile] ownperson) & Agent North Dakota ([personal profile] gooddefense)
What: Unresolved tension boils over
When: Mid-December, pre holidays
Where: North's farm, Northwest Hollow
Warning(s): Excessive alcohol/alcohol abuse, ongoing mental health crises, discussion of betrayal/fratricide by proxy, possible references to past emotional abuse/neglect, others added as necessary



She doesn't mean to get back so late.

One drink turns into two drinks into five into ten and, outside the Oak & Iron's windows, the world turns black and white as night creeps in and snow drifts down from clouds overhead. Midnight is already long behind her by the time the bartender finally cuts her off so they can close up, ushering her out to brave the chill as she curses herself for losing track of time. It's a long walk back from downtown to the farmhouse even on a good day and, between trudging through snowfall and her own drunken clumsiness, this is not a good day. Should've left sooner. Should've been back hours ago. It's just—

Been getting harder and harder to spend time in the house without wanting to scream, the last few days—fuck, the last couple weeks, really. Hours will go by where everything seems okay and then something will happen, something small, something she barely even notices, and everything gets weird again. North gets weird again. But then she doesn't say a word, and, eventually, things go back to normal. Until the cycle repeats. Over and over and over again and—

She just needed to get out of the house. Needed a drink and to clear her head. That's all. That's fucking all.

Her pale skin is red and her hands are shaking as much from the cold as the alcohol, by the time she hauls herself up the porch steps and fumbles with the lock on the door. It's not quiet, it's not considerate. When it finally clicks open, she shoulders the door and stumbles inside, shoving it back shut behind her. Her boots thud heavily against the wooden floor and she grunts, huffing as she fights to get the stupid things off so she can drag herself to bed.
cyansoldier: (huh)

[personal profile] cyansoldier 2026-02-06 06:42 pm (UTC)(link)

Yep. Carolina was expecting that. How else do you react to some grade A bullshit of the familial-vocational variety? She chuckles— not forced, exactly, but with no real sense of amusement, either. It's embarrassing. It's bad. Her father is bad and more often than not she's petrified about what that means for her. Put her in front of any mirror and she'll pick her features apart— assigning which are his and which are hers— exhaustively.

(What's worse, wanting to be the better parent and knowing you're the bad one— or knowing you would have picked the bad one over the better, if you had the chance? Her mother was always an unavailability. But him. Him. He was possible. He was within her reach, and that drove her fucking insane.)

"You can imagine my pride," said in weary, sarcastic tones. Carolina sets her gun down, puts on a brave face and turns toward South. "He said it was important that no one knew."

cyansoldier: (pout)

[personal profile] cyansoldier 2026-02-08 08:08 pm (UTC)(link)

"Yeah, that... stung. I thought being his— would mean something in the end." Stung— it gutted her. Admitting that, though, is like coughing up metal shrapnel— painful, messy, humiliating. Waylaid in the snow and waiting to be picked up, looked after. What had she done wrong? She did everything he asked. She pursued Texas. She refused York. She fought and fought and fought for him, and he left her there, and she can't shake the feeling that it's her fault— that she must have done something to make him dislike her.

Parents should have to like their children, at least a little, she wants to say, juvenile and bitter and clinging. Don't start acting like an infant.

"Maine took what he needed. He must have assumed I was dead. Well, that's his mistake." She gums solvent onto weathered metal and lets it eat away the grime. Her sober attitude is almost jarring. A star shape shoved into a triangular hole. "I found him once— I'll find him again. And when I do, I'm going to kill him, and all of this will finally be over. It's the least I can do, and I want to be the one to do it."

cyansoldier: (cheek)

[personal profile] cyansoldier 2026-02-11 06:44 pm (UTC)(link)

Hating the Director is simple. Chewing him up and spitting him out as an unkind name is simple. Putting a bullet into his brain, watching bone and tissue splash whatever surface is nearest, will (she hopes) be simple. What's not simple— digesting South's explosive force on her behalf; contempt for what he's done to her, his daughter, in parallel to what he's done to others.

Her gut pulls toward the surface. She feels more seen than she has in— Christ— too many years, the acknowledgement like a riptide prepared to take her out at the ankles. Carolina pinches her nose where the bridge of her reading glasses might sit.

"I don't know what I expected. I thought, maybe, we'd pick up where we left off. Before his doctorate— before Mom— he was just... normal. A normal dad. I knew that wasn't going to happen. I saw him change. I could feel it in his emails. He talked differently. He would say weird things. And later I thought if I worked hard enough, if I wanted it enough, I could have it. Him. Whatever.

"You're not wrong, though. It was special treatment, and I acted like a brat. I felt entitled. I would get angry— so angry at everything."

Edited 2026-02-11 18:45 (UTC)